The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 14, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 September 1921 — Page 2
THE BOURBON HUH, OCTOBER 4-7,1321 Automobile Raises on Saturday, Ootober 8.
NEWS ITEMS FRQM OUR SURROUNDINGS (Concluded from Page One) Mr. and Mrs. Cull Grissamer of Goshen called at the Geo. Zerbe home Sunday. . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stetler and children visited at the Ben Hentzell home Sunday. The two Hentzell sons left for their homes Monday after spending two weeks here with their parents, Ben Hentzell and wife. Mrs. Mike McFern and three children from Goshen are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hentzell, and her two brothers from the west. Mrs. Esther Matson from Chicago called on Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bailey Thursday. Wm. Bailey, Mrs. Don Strock and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bailey went to the Elkhart hospital to see their sister, Mrs. Parker, who had undergone an operation. She is much improved at the last report. Mrs. Yoder and her sister Alice called on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bailey Sunday afternoon. Cedar Square Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Crow of Cedar Point have moved to Cromwell Thursday. They expect to make their home there for the winter. Mrs. Hetta Meyers came last Thursday to spend a few days visiting with Manford Morris and family. W. A. Jones and family took dinner Sundam with John Kauffman and familf. Mrs. Perry Dull and son Albert motored to South Bend on Saturday to spend the day with Mrs. Dull’s daughter, Mrs. Orrin Spillman. Sherman has moved his family in thej house of Mrs. Josephine Woods last Thursday. Wilmet Jones and family and Fred Harper and family attended the Kendallville fair Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John Kauffman and daughter Hev* spent Monday evening at the Frank Sloan home in Syracuse. Chester Swenson and family and Mr. and Mrs. John Swenson were Goshen callers Friday. Solounon’s Creek & Benton Sunday school at 10:00 a. m.; preaching services following. A welcome to all. Anderson Juday and daughter Leila took Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Nath Long. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Pearman spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Amzie Wordin ger of near Dunlaps. Albert Darr and family attended the Shalenburg reunion, which was held at the Frank Wingard home near Ligonier on Sunday. ■ Mrs. Bertha Hapner and son Kenneth were Sunday guests at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hire. Mr. and Mrs. John Good attended the services at the U. B. church in Ligonier Sunday. Wayne Hapner was a guest of Wesley Weybright and family Sunday. Omer Darr and family, and
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Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Juday took Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Juday. Mr. and Mrs. Dersy Butt and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Long of Elkhart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Ott. John C. Juday, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Pence, and Mr. and Mrs. Will Juday and daughter Elizabeth of Goshen spent Sunday in Ligonier with Mr. and Mrs. Will Hire. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stookey of Pittsburg, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Stookey of near Syracuse were visitors last week at the Willis Ott home. Listen for the wedding bells Wednesday evening. Jesse Juday of Goshen called on John C. Juday Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Tully and son Joseph and Mrs. Louisa Hapner spent Sunday at the Elly Tully home. A number from here attended the Kendallville fair last week. Mrs. Frank Juday, who was on the sick list, is better again. John C. Juday called at the Ollie Pence home Tuesday. Uncle Jasse Darr is having a garage btnlt. The Sunday school council meeting will be at Benton M. E. church Sunday afternoon. A general invitation is given. o_ . KICK AN’ EVERYTHING We have been handed a recipe for home brew that is declared to exceed anything else that has been invented since the neardeath of the late John Barleycorn. For the benefit of those interested we take pleasure in publishing it: Chase a bull fro ,v three miles and gather up th hops; to the hops add the folk wing: 10 gals, tan bark, 1 pt. shellac, a bar of home-made soap; boil mixture 38 hours. Then strain through an I. W. W. sock to keep it from working, then bottle and add one grasshopper to each pint to give it the kick. —(Bremen Enquirer. ■ o WATER METERS FAVORED The City of Connersville is requiring customers of the water department to put in meters. The city charges $9.00 for tapping the mains and SIO.OO for the meter. The minimum charge for service is 50 cents a month. Such a policy may inflict a temporary hardship on some, but it is the only just way to use the water system. Under the old system of a fiat rate some leave their fawcets open all the time, ethers sprinkle without nozzles. These get more than they pay for, while others pay more than they get. . o — List your wants with The Journal.
I i . . 1 - f II Get Ready for the Big I Home Coming! i ;g AT 3 I NAPPANEE | | ON — I g Wed. Oct. 12th g ■ ■ : : | Free Entertainment All g Day and Evening g i Band Concerts, Ox Roast, ■ High Class Free Acts g 1 3 Watch for ad. next week giving full particulars
PARAGRAPHIC BITS ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Coming and Going of People You Know. s , Clifford Ott who is teaching at ' Cromwell this year, spent last week end at home in Syracuse. Miss Goldie Mathews spent over Sunday in Fort Wayne visiting with her aunt, Mrs. Ida Reckelderfer. Victor Darr and family of Mishawaka are spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darr. Mrs. Abe Hire and son Lonnie visited yesterday in Elkhart, where her son, E. W. Hire, is seriously ill with asthma. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Smith and daughter Milford of Cromwell came yesterday and visited at the Ernest C. Smith home. Dr. and Mrs. Geo. H. Brown are moving here this week from Fort Wayne. They will occupy the Bates lesidence in Lake ! street. | I Jas. J. Bolger of Chicago, for-1 ' merly a resident of # Syracuse, was here this week on business 1 and shook hands with many old friends. | It is claimed that the constant use of the ouija board in England is causing insanity. We wonder i whether insanity comes before' ,or after the use of the board. i I Miss Harriett Berninger, who ’ has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. Josephine Woods, returned to her home in Lancaster, 111., ' where She is employed as superintendent of the public schools. Mrs. Welty of Marion is expected to reach Syracuse today from Virginia where she she has been visiting the past three weeks. She will remain here this winter with Mrs. Joe Rapp : and her daughter, Miss Lucy ! Welty. Dr. and Mrs. T. M. Guild of Huntington spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Gants. Mrs. 1 Guild will be remembered as Miss Myrtle Judkins, daughter i of the late Colonel O. H. Judkins , of Indianapolis, who at one time t was proprietor of the Wawasee Inn. Dr. Guild was formerly , pastor of the Ligonier M. E; church. i __ DR. BYLER’S RHEUMATIC REMEDY is as near a specific for rheumatism 1 as any drug known to the medical profession. Contains neither Alcohol, or opiates in any form, and Is as near a specific for Rheumatism as quinine is, for ague. Mailed to your address on receipt of the price $1.50 or personal attention if you call at office. DR. J. M. BYLER 44 years experience general practice of medicine all professional calls promptly ! answered Phone 152 122| S. Buffalo St,, Warsaw, Ind.
LAKE WAWASEE AND SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Sherman Coy of near Vawter Park has moved to the Milton Woods farm and will occupy the house vacated by Mrs. Kate Woods. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Disher and son, Ralph jr., of Toledo, are spending this week here visiting with Mr. Disher’s parents, Mr; and Mrs. Columbus Disher, and 1 with their friends. L. A. Wilkinson, the new proprietor of the Quality Hardware Store, completed his service iri his position at South Bend and on Tuesday came to Syracuse to assume the management of the hardware store and to become a permanent citizep. John Bender brought to The Journal office yesterday twoi •mammoth sweet potatoes. The largest weighed 4 lbs. 2 oz. and measured 31 inches in girth. He challenges anybody in this community to “prove up’’ on a bigger one than this. Donald Bailey has gone to Orland, Ind., for a few days. On his return he and Mrs. Bailey will move into the Mrs. Wilma Harsh property in west Huntington street. Mr. Bailey will continue to be employed by Chas. G. Miller, the new proprietor of the I Grand hotel. I Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Jeffries left Sunday for Boston, where Mr. Jeffries is now stationed, . after spending more than two I weeks here visiting with relatives and friends. Mr. Jeffries, who is serving his third enlist-, , ment in the U. S. Navy, is now , on land duty and will be station- ; ed at Boston for about two years, j Mrs. B. F. Kitson, who had spent three weeks in Denver visiting, returned Saturday. She reports that about fifty people were present at the wedding of her daughter, Pearl, to Mr. Asa Turner. She accompanied Mr. I and Mrs. Turner on a trip to the , mountains in Colorado. She en-' joyed the visit and came back ‘ in‘fine health. ! I
I “See My Lawyer’! • • • Robertson Cole Superspecial • • 6-Reel Comedy-Drama • : at the : j Oakland Theater i : Saturday Evening ; ; Don’t miss this delightfully entertaining picture brim- • • fill of wholesome humor, J J AdniCssk-ii, 11c and 22c • x ' y1 F<Q®jTi Scientists say that whole wheat contains all the elements essential to man. Bread is the staff of life but the :W|MHE nutritive value / depends on the quality of flour that is put into it Our Stock of Flour Is the Best the mills can make, and you have a choice of several excellent brands at this store. We sell also a select line of staple and fancy groceries. Our business policy, as you know, is Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty—Service Seider & Burgener ' Pure Food Grocers
DAREDEVIL THOMAS ENTERED JN RACES WITH BUICK —TO CAPTAIN THE TEAM Had Hard Battle to Gain Present Position. Frank Thomas, of Indianapolis, Ind., who stepped into the captaincy of the Buick team with the retirement of Billy McKinney and who now occupies, the berth, that formerly was the property of Louis Wiliams, will be a starter in the automobile races which are to be held at the Bourbon Fair, Saturday, October Bth. Thomas did not earn the top position on the Buick outfit without a battle, which started in 1919, when he joined the team in the role of a humble mechanician. After serving as a pit man and oil pumper until 1920, he was giveh a car and told to go out and do his darnedest. And he did, right through the fence, at Edinburg last year. Instead of winning first place, he won a cot in the hospital for six weeks. After his rocovery, Thomas .started to use his head just as well as his heavy foot, and the result was that he finished high up in some of the most important races throughout the country, and he continued to get away without a scratch until this spring in the Southeastern Sweetstakes at Atlanta, when his Buick decided to leave the track, and plunged into a lake in the infield. Thoma?, was fished from the waters. Then he went around trying l to borrow a diver’s suit so he could go down into the lake and help salvage his car. The Buick has just been reconstructed at Detroit and the plucky Irishman will attempt to show Bill Hunt, Louis Williams and the others that they are not the only drivers that can win races. There is no question about his. daring, as specta- . tors who attended the Edinburg races ■ last year will testify. | Another one of the most feared drivers in these races is Worth I Schlochman of Indianapolis. He is I going to drive the Stutz, which car I has a record of 90 miles per hour on ’ the Indianapolis track. Schlochman
is going to apply for entry in the next Speedway' race at Indianapolis. Indianas leading speed artists who have more than held their own in dirt track classics throughout the country for the past number of years are in line for the events, and a tough battle is expected in every one of the races on the program. The field of entries will be divided into groups for each of the ten mjle sprints, and the winner of these will compete in a program headliner—a 25-mile go. The goal of all the drivers is entry to the 25-mile- race, and they can be backed to kick up plenty of dust in an effort to put over 10-mile victories. The feature event promises to be a crackerjack race, as it will bring the fastest cars and the most daring dirt track drivers of Indiana together in competition for the biggest prize that has ever been offered for a race of this kind on Hoosier soil. For the past week the drivers have been tuning up their cars, and all are satisfied that they can show the fans more speed than has ever been exhibited on any dirt track. Indications point that the attendance record will be broken to this year’s speed as foretold by the large number of out-of-town sales and inquiries to date. Every possible precaution will be taken by the management to prevent a recurrence of the accidents which last year snuffed out the lives of several drivers. (Advertisement),
Edison Records If you haven’t tried Edison Recreation you are missing something. Come in and hear some of these new October numbers. No. 50821—Price, $1.35 Ho—Fox Trot Orlando's Orchestra Sleepy Head (Introducing “Tuifieht Time”) —Waltz Lullabye, Orlando’s Orchestra No. 50822—Price, $1.35 Learn to Smile (Introducing “Conversation Step”) Medley Fox Trot —The O’Brien Girl Harry Radennan’s Jazz Orchestra Stolen Kisses —l ox Trot Harry Radernian’s Jazz Orchestra No. 50826—Price, $1.35 One Kiss —Fox Trot Conrad’s Orchestra Cho-Cho-San —Fox Trot Conrad’s Orchestra No. 50827—Price, $1.35 When the Honeymoon Was Over—Fox Trot Broadway Dance Orchestra My Sunny Tennessee —Fox Trot Broadway Dance Orchestra No. 50828—Price, $1.35 Baby in Love —Fox Trot—Last Waltz, Chib de Vingt Orchestra I Know Why Your Called You “Baby'*—Fox Trot Club de Vingt Orchestra No. 50836—Price, $1,35 My Galway Bose—lrish Eyes Walter Scanlan Mavourneen—lrish Eyes Walter Scanlan No. 50801—Price, $1.35 I Know Where the Flies Go (On a Cold and Frosty Morning) —Biff, Bing, Bang w Billy Jones All By Myself Helen Clark No. 50819—Price, $1.35 Molly On a Trolley—Vernon Dalhart and Betsy Lane Shepherd AO-LAY-EE-00 (Means I Love You) Marguerite Farrell No. 50820—Price, $1.35 Ain’t You Coining Out, Malinda? Al Bernard and Ernest Hare Aunt Phoebe’s Wedding Day Billy Gohlen and Billy Heins No. 50824—Price, $1.35 Just Because—Fox Trot Earl Fuller’s New r York Orchestrii I Wonder Where My Sweet, Sweet Daddy’s Gone—Fox Trot Earl Fuller’s New York Orchestra : No. 50829—Prifee, $1.35 If Shamrocks Grew Along the Swanee Shore Charles Hart and Lewis Janies Fare Thee Well, Love (Fare Thee Well) Elizabeth Spencer and Lewis Janies
No. 50746—Price, $1.35 Rainbow Ada Jones and Billy Murray Put On Your Slippers, You’re In For the Night Ada Jones No. 50747—Price, $1.35 Casey Jones Billy Jones and Male Chorus Scene On the Old Plantation Billy Golden and Empire Vaudeville Company > No. t)o<4B- —'Price, $1.30 El Capitan March, Sousa New York Military Band Flirtation Valse —Intertnezzo Conway’s Band No. 80629—Price, 11.85 Bird At the Water Fall Sibyl Sanderson Fagan Two Little Bullfinches Polka Weyert A. Moor andi Anthony Giammatteo No. 80630—Price, $1.85 When the Swallows Hohieward Fly Elizabeth Spencer and Charles Hart Massa’s In De Cold, Cold Ground Metropolitan Quartet No. 80631—Price, $1.85 Sweeter As the Years Go By Helen Davis, Lewis James and Mixed Chorus Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling Metropolitan Quartet No. 80632—Price, $1.85 I Hear a Thrush At Eve ,and Kitty of Coleraine Helen Clark My Lady Chlo’, and Since You Went Away Vernon Dalhart No. 80633—Price, $1.85 Madame Butterfly Selection—Part I, Puccini American Symphony Orchestra Madame Butterfly Selection—Part 11, Puccini American Symphony Orchestra No. 80635—Price, £T.BS Ole Uncle Moon, Scott Criterion Quartet Sleep Little Baby of Mine Betsy Lane Shepherd No. 82138—Price, $2.25 Deh vieni, non tardar (Ah, come, nor linger more) —Le Nozze di Figaro, Mozart Marie Tiffany Elegie (Elegy ), Massenet Marie Tiffany No, 82225—Price, $2.25 Dumka (Lament) Vasa Prihoda Sextet—Lucia Vasa Prihoda No, 82226—Price, $2.25 0 God, Have Mercy—Saint Paul, Mendelssohn Arthur Middleton Lass o’Mine, Turner-Maley Arthur Middleton THORNBURG’S
ANNOUNCEMENT Beginning Saturday, October Ist, Dr. Geo. H. Brown, Chiropractor, with lady attendant, will be in his office above Hoch’s j drug store, every day at the following hours: 9:00 to 11:30 a. m„ 1:30 to 4:30 p. m. and 6:30 ° i to 8:00 in the evening; Sunday by appointment. Spinal anal y. is I given free. Dr. Geo. H. Brown, (221) Chiropractor. — O T Geo. D. Bartholomew has two White Wyandotte pullets “that began laying at the age of four months and two days. He not only claims the belt from B. F. ; Hoopingarner, whose Plymouth. I Rock pullets began laying at the j age of 5 months, but he also j challenges anybody else in the I community to beat the record. J. M. SHAFFER 1 Chiropractor At thd Landis Residence Corner Harrison & Pearl Sts. i Tuesday & Friday of Each I Hours:’ 2 to 5 and, 8 to 9 p. m.
